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Dive into the research topics where Sharon Bone is active.

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Featured researches published by Sharon Bone.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2014

Mackinawite (FeS) Reduces Mercury(II) under Sulfidic Conditions

Sharon Bone; John R. Bargar; Garrison Sposito

Mercury (Hg) is a toxicant of global concern that accumulates in organisms as methyl Hg. The production of methyl Hg by anaerobic bacteria may be limited in anoxic sediments by the sequestration of divalent Hg [Hg(II)] into a solid phase or by the formation of elemental Hg [Hg(0)]. We tested the hypothesis that nanocrystalline mackinawite (tetragonal FeS), which is abundant in sediments where Hg is methylated, both sorbs and reduces Hg(II). Mackinawite suspensions were equilibrated with dissolved Hg(II) in batch reactors. Examination of the solid phase using Hg LIII-edge extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectroscopy showed that Hg(II) was indeed reduced in FeS suspensions. Measurement of purgeable Hg using cold vapor atomic fluorescence spectrometry (CVAFS) from FeS suspensions and control solutions corroborated the production of Hg(0) that was observed spectroscopically. However, a fraction of the Hg(II) initially added to the suspensions remained in the divalent state, likely in the form of β-HgS-like clusters associated with the FeS surface or as a mixture of β-HgS and surface-associated species. Complexation by dissolved S(-II) in anoxic sediments hinders Hg(0) formation, but, by contrast, Hg(II)–S(-II) species are reduced in the presence of mackinawite, producing Hg(0) after only 1 h of reaction time. The results of our work support the idea that Hg(0) accounts for a significant fraction of the total Hg in wetland and estuarine sediments.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Uranium(IV) adsorption by natural organic matter in anoxic sediments

Sharon Bone; James J. Dynes; John Cliff; John R. Bargar

Significance Uranium is an important fuel source and pollutant, and its chemical form determines its reactivity in the environment. However, information on the speciation of tetravalent U [U(IV)] in sediments is lacking. The research presented herein takes a holistic view of U(IV) speciation in a natural material containing microbial cells, organic matter, and minerals. Our work demonstrates unequivocally that U(IV) adsorbs to natural organic matter under anoxic, field-relevant conditions. Furthermore, we put forward a conceptual model that provides a framework for future studies of U biogeochemistry in which postreduction surface complexation processes can be used to predict U(IV) behavior. Our work has ramifications for remediation of U-contaminated sites and also informs in situ mining practices. Uranium is an important carbon-free fuel source and environmental contaminant that accumulates in the tetravalent state, U(IV), in anoxic sediments, such as ore deposits, marine basins, and contaminated aquifers. However, little is known about the speciation of U(IV) in low-temperature geochemical environments, inhibiting the development of a conceptual model of U behavior. Until recently, U(IV) was assumed to exist predominantly as the sparingly soluble mineral uraninite (UO2+x) in anoxic sediments; however, studies now show that this is not often the case. Yet a model of U(IV) speciation in the absence of mineral formation under field-relevant conditions has not yet been developed. Uranium(IV) speciation controls its reactivity, particularly its susceptibility to oxidative mobilization, impacting its distribution and toxicity. Here we show adsorption to organic carbon and organic carbon-coated clays dominate U(IV) speciation in an organic-rich natural substrate under field-relevant conditions. Whereas previous research assumed that U(IV) speciation is dictated by the mode of reduction (i.e., whether reduction is mediated by microbes or by inorganic reductants), our results demonstrate that mineral formation can be diminished in favor of adsorption, regardless of reduction pathway. Projections of U transport and bioavailability, and thus its threat to human and ecosystem health, must consider U(IV) adsorption to organic matter within the sediment environment.


Science of The Total Environment | 2017

Understanding controls on redox processes in floodplain sediments of the Upper Colorado River Basin

Vincent Noël; Kristin Boye; Ravi K. Kukkadapu; Sharon Bone; Juan S. Lezama Pacheco; Emily Cardarelli; Noémie Janot; Scott Fendorf; Kenneth H. Williams; John R. Bargar

Floodplains, heavily used for water supplies, housing, agriculture, mining, and industry, are important repositories of organic carbon, nutrients, and metal contaminants. The accumulation and release of these species is often mediated by redox processes. Understanding the physicochemical, hydrological, and biogeochemical controls on the distribution and variability of sediment redox conditions is therefore critical to developing conceptual and numerical models of contaminant transport within floodplains. The Upper Colorado River Basin (UCRB) is impacted by former uranium and vanadium ore processing, resulting in contamination by V, Cr, Mn, As, Se, Mo and U. Previous authors have suggested that sediment redox activity occurring within organic carbon-enriched bodies located below the groundwater level may be regionally important to the maintenance and release of contaminant inventories, particularly uranium. To help assess this hypothesis, vertical distributions of Fe and S redox states and sulfide mineralogy were assessed in sediment cores from three floodplain sites spanning a 250km transect of the central UCRB. The results of this study support the hypothesis that organic-enriched reduced sediments are important zones of biogeochemical activity within UCRB floodplains. We found that the presence of organic carbon, together with pore saturation, are the key requirements for maintaining reducing conditions, which were dominated by sulfate-reduction products. Sediment texture was found to be of secondary importance and to moderate the response of the system to external forcing, such as oxidant diffusion. Consequently, fine-grain sediments are relatively resistant to oxidation in comparison to coarser-grained sediments. Exposure to oxidants consumes precipitated sulfides, with a disproportionate loss of mackinawite (FeS) as compared to the more stable pyrite. The accompanying loss of redox buffering capacity creates the potential for release of sequestered radionuclides and metals. Because of their redox reactivity and stores of metals, C, and N, organic-enriched sediments are likely to be important to nutrient and contaminant mobility within UCRB floodplain aquifers.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2017

Oxidative Uranium Release from Anoxic Sediments under Diffusion-Limited Conditions

Sharon Bone; Melanie R. Cahill; Morris E. Jones; Scott Fendorf; James A. Davis; Kenneth H. Williams; John R. Bargar

Uranium (U) contamination occurs as a result of mining and ore processing; often in alluvial aquifers that contain organic-rich, reduced sediments that accumulate tetravalent U, U(IV). Uranium(IV) is sparingly soluble, but may be mobilized upon exposure to nitrate (NO3-) and oxygen (O2), which become elevated in groundwater due to seasonal fluctuations in the water table. The extent to which oxidative U mobilization can occur depends upon the transport properties of the sediments, the rate of U(IV) oxidation, and the availability of inorganic reductants and organic electron donors that consume oxidants. We investigated the processes governing U release upon exposure of reduced sediments to artificial groundwater containing O2 or NO3- under diffusion-limited conditions. Little U was mobilized during the 85-day reaction, despite rapid diffusion of groundwater within the sediments and the presence of nonuraninite U(IV) species. The production of ferrous iron and sulfide in conjunction with rapid oxidant consumption suggested that the sediments harbored large concentrations of bioavailable organic carbon that fueled anaerobic microbial respiration and stabilized U(IV). Our results suggest that seasonal influxes of O2 and NO3- may cause only localized mobilization of U without leading to export of U from the reducing sediments when ample organic carbon is present.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2017

Redox Controls over the Stability of U(IV) in Floodplains of the Upper Colorado River Basin

Vincent Noël; Kristin Boye; Juan S. Lezama Pacheco; Sharon Bone; Noémie Janot; Emily Cardarelli; Kenneth H. Williams; John R. Bargar

Aquifers in the Upper Colorado River Basin (UCRB) exhibit persistent uranium (U) groundwater contamination plumes originating from former ore processing operations. Previous observations at Rifle, Colorado, have shown that fine grained, sulfidic, organic-enriched sediments accumulate U in its reduced form, U(IV), which is less mobile than oxidized U(VI). These reduced sediment bodies can subsequently act as secondary sources, releasing U back to the aquifer. There is a need to understand if U(IV) accumulation in reduced sediments is a common process at contaminated sites basin-wide, to constrain accumulated U(IV) speciation, and to define the biogeochemical factors controlling its reactivity. We have investigated U(IV) accumulation in organic-enriched reduced sediments at three UCRB floodplains. Noncrystalline U(IV) is the dominant form of accumulated U, but crystalline U(IV) comprises up to ca. 30% of total U at some locations. Differing susceptibilities of these species to oxidative remobilization can explain this variability. Particle size, organic carbon content, and pore saturation, control the exposure of U(IV) to oxidants, moderating its oxidative release. Further, our data suggest that U(IV) can be mobilized under deeply reducing conditions, which may contribute to maintenance and seasonal variability of U in groundwater plumes in the UCRB.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2007

Has submarine groundwater discharge been overlooked as a source of mercury to coastal waters

Sharon Bone; Matthew A. Charette; Carl H. Lamborg; Meagan Eagle Gonneea


Environmental Science & Technology | 2006

Geochemical Cycling of Arsenic in a Coastal Aquifer

Sharon Bone; Meagan Eagle Gonneea; Matthew A. Charette


Physical Review B | 2011

Magnetic ordering in tetragonal FeS: Evidence for strong itinerant spin fluctuations

Kideok D. Kwon; Keith Refson; Sharon Bone; Ruimin Qiao; Wan-li Yang; Zhi Liu; Garrison Sposito


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2015

Probing the sorption reactivity of the edge surfaces in birnessite nanoparticles using nickel(II)

Anna A. Simanova; Kideok D. Kwon; Sharon Bone; John R. Bargar; Keith Refson; Garrison Sposito; Jasquelin Peña


Nature Geoscience | 2017

Thermodynamically controlled preservation of organic carbon in floodplains

Kristin Boye; Vincent Noël; Malak M. Tfaily; Sharon Bone; Kenneth H. Williams; John R. Bargar; Scott Fendorf

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John R. Bargar

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Kenneth H. Williams

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Karrie A. Weber

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Daniel D. Snow

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Jason Nolan

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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